Is there a way to do something like PHPs $array[] = 'foo';
in bash vs doing:
array[0]='foo'
array[1]='bar'
Yes there is:
ARRAY=()
ARRAY+=('foo')
ARRAY+=('bar')
In the context where an assignment statement is assigning a value to a shell variable or array index (see Arrays), the ‘+=’ operator can be used to append to or add to the variable's previous value.
Also:
When += is applied to an array variable using compound assignment (see Arrays below), the variable's value is not unset (as it is when using =), and new values are appended to the array beginning at one greater than the array's maximum index (for indexed arrays)
ARRAY
is just a placeholder for an actual variable name. Even if your array indices are not sequential, appending with +=
will simply assign to the highest index + 1.
Sep 21, 2012 at 3:01
${myarray[@]}
- referencing an array variable as if it were a scalar is the same as accessing its element 0; in other words: $myarray
is the same as ${myarray[0]}
.
May 13, 2015 at 17:25
As Dumb Guy points out, it's important to note whether the array starts at zero and is sequential. Since you can make assignments to and unset non-contiguous indices ${#array[@]}
is not always the next item at the end of the array.
$ array=(a b c d e f g h)
$ array[42]="i"
$ unset array[2]
$ unset array[3]
$ declare -p array # dump the array so we can see what it contains
declare -a array='([0]="a" [1]="b" [4]="e" [5]="f" [6]="g" [7]="h" [42]="i")'
$ echo ${#array[@]}
7
$ echo ${array[${#array[@]}]}
h
Here's how to get the last index:
$ end=(${!array[@]}) # put all the indices in an array
$ end=${end[@]: -1} # get the last one
$ echo $end
42
That illustrates how to get the last element of an array. You'll often see this:
$ echo ${array[${#array[@]} - 1]}
g
As you can see, because we're dealing with a sparse array, this isn't the last element. This works on both sparse and contiguous arrays, though:
$ echo ${array[@]: -1}
i
${array[@]: start[:count]}
Returns count elems. or, if not specified, all remaining elems. starting at the following elem.: - If start >= 0: from the elem. whose index is >= start. - If start < 0: from the elem. whose index is (last array index + 1) - abs(start); CAVEAT: if abs(start) > (last array index + 1), a null string is returned. If count is specified, as many elements are returned, even if their indices are not contiguous from start.
Sep 21, 2012 at 5:47
${array[-1]}
Sep 21, 2012 at 15:02
$ declare -a arr
$ arr=("a")
$ arr=("${arr[@]}" "new")
$ echo ${arr[@]}
a new
$ arr=("${arr[@]}" "newest")
$ echo ${arr[@]}
a new newest
arr=("${arr[@]}" "new")
if you have elements with spaces in them
+=
variant is probably much more efficient.
If your array is always sequential and starts at 0, then you can do this:
array[${#array[@]}]='foo'
# gets the length of the array
${#array_name[@]}
If you inadvertently use spaces between the equal sign:
array[${#array[@]}] = 'foo'
Then you will receive an error similar to:
array_name[3]: command not found
+=
syntax (see @e-t172's answer) is (a) simpler, and (b) also works with arrays that are non-contiguous and/or do not start with 0.
Sep 21, 2012 at 3:06
+=
was added, eg version 2
Jun 11, 2019 at 2:09
$arr += ($el)
seemed to split the string by space and add each of the elements.
With an indexed array, you can to something like this:
declare -a a=()
a+=('foo' 'bar')
Append element:
array+=("${element}")
Append another array:
array+=("${array[@]}")
Append command output:
readarray -t output < <(command)
array+=("${output[@]}")
also check this out :
test_array=(1 2 3 4)
test_array+=(5)
echo "${test_array[@]}"
Result : 1 2 3 4 5
the +=
operator can be used to append a single element or multiple elements to an array, in instance, you can append more elements to the array like this:
test_array+=(6 7 8 9)
echo "${test_array[@]}"
Result : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
I wanna mention that you can also remove an element from an array in Bash without specifying the index, you can use the unset
command with the element's value
test_array=(1 2 3 4 5)
unset test_array[2]
echo "${test_array[@]}"
Result : 1 2 4 5
be careful, when you remove an element from an array, the indices of the remaining elements will be adjusted accordingly. In the example above, when I remove the third element with the value 3
, the fourth and fifth elements become the new third and fourth elements, respectively.